88 .;,ftiid I I : \":: ..:...:....:. .:.... ë :; :.;i: J I:":'J%':::. ::::::::' . . ;q: ._, . 1s ..: ':':'.':'. ......-""... ......... . /'. Hr'" " . ..:",;.w '" .;Y 1 ...:i.. W':'::'. ". ,.. 'x:.:' : ;::!:k}@! Þ.:: :;::t':.:\ .. . .;,,; ll.... : JWi,::'j: "$.:":" The Thrill of Winged Flight whether in lleroplane or mOllern runabout, which is virtullily II water plane, is similllr in both. A 200 horsepower Sterling Petrel engine drives this Sea-Lyon runabout at over 40 miles per hour. That the thrill may be pro- longed. continued on indefinitely. as you will. this Petrel is built 16/,0 larger (779 cubic inches) and with greater power at useable revolutions - 2000 R.P .M. M ræ t. %."i . n:>;::if" i I'::i :,,)ffi (Any comparable engine. of 678 cubic inCh piston displacement. must turn 300 to 500 revolutiolls laster, with tremendously i1U:rca.sed effort, to eqlMll .,he Petrel.) The Sterling Petrel's fuel consumption is satisfactorily le$$ per mile. . . . . . It is safely carbureted. {'t:l/:.::t i :(. :::":;-;:;:"./' ". :::.;::: :..' . STERLING ENGINE COMPANY .:.. 1270 Niagara Street W. H. Moreton Corp.. 1043 Commonwealth Ave. 12 to 565 H.P. distrib utors. Boston Buff lo. N. Y.. U. S. A. Brun:<, Kimball & Co._ 5th Ave. fit )i)th St.. . distributors. New York. :::: t :=::";:::;::::" :::::::::::::::::; ::::::::':-:: ". " :;a ] A: ,J Ì; ;rt )". -::':. .. :.' :;... .... .:':.n tji:(:..!.w: ('" . .. /::::I ; :: l I.,;, ..l.,;' W":: << :-' . /. . . Ø". . ><;..' -..:=:-.. i ::::':.::':':':"" ' .::':" .. . :;:':::..... .' :.. w.w.;0: ,>>>. '""., 1L::: "", :.::..... .:,,* * WL?2 '17 :" {'Ü\"Y! ,dt:;/fi; --. -:"' -/ <-.'. ". ::"'ff ,-. ,..1:>r.Seu s 1tIJ. , , I.. ,,'t...., "Wife on vacation, King?" "Vacation nothing. Nice girl, but I simþly had to swap her Í11 for this Flit Gun." (Advertisement) SEPTEMDER 1.3 It 1 9 :} 0 .;.: iii j;' however, \'Tinston Guest had chosen, as he well might have, to cast his for- tunes with the British, there would not be so much talk of America's supremacy in polo today. The first of this year's International games presented a per- fect demonstration of the im portan t part Guest plays on our team. The Americans won with something to spare; and after the opening periods of stubborn resistance, the Britons never really had lTIuch of a chance. . This was because the relentless attack of the Americans gradually made it impossi- ble for the challengers to do anything but play defensively. There was no one on the entire British team with the strength and the power to do more than delay the inevitable. There was no one with the strength to change a defence abruptly into an attack. Now \Vinston Guest can do that. He can do it superbly. His defence is an attack, as is Hitchcock's; and he- tween them, the American doctrine- of attack, first, last, and always, works beautifully. Hitchcock, of course, is greatly responsible for that; but if you took away Guest and put him on the other side, the story would be quite different. Hitchcock cannot carry a team alone. He has won all of his In terna tional victories with Milburn or Guest at hack. With an ordinary player behind him, he would not have quite the reputation he has at present. :.:.:. ij : :" AT MEADo\\r BROOK: The start of rl. the first big game being held up five minutes for the benefit of the movies. . . . Gentleman Jim Corbett arriving to see what polo is like. . . . Louis Stoddard rising in his box to con- sult with the umpires over a foul. . . . The bagpipes marching at the head of the British ponies in the parade. . . . Tommy Hitchcock emhracing his father after the first game. . . . And, two days before the first game, Tommy Hitch- cock, Pat Roark, and Charlie Schwartz broadcasting from the top of the empty stands. . . Hitchcock's speech being hastily rewritten by lamplight when it was found to be almost the same as Schwartz'. . .. . Roark and Hitchcock ",howing distinct signs of fright before the microphone, and of obvious relief when it was over.. -MARTINGALE . Mosquitoes may be rendered less menacing to man by the provision for them of shelter and food elsewhere than in human habitations.-] ournal of the A nzerican Medical Association Put us down for six families.